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rview that he `` talked her into '' her first futures trade in October 1978 befo re paperwork on her account was completed . It was liquidated quickly , he recal led , because `` it was bigger than she wanted and required more money . '' A cl ose examination of her individual trades underscores Blair 's pivotal role . It also shows that Bone , who ran Refco 's Springdale , Ark. , office , allowed Cli nton to initiate and maintain many trading positions besides the first when she did not have enough money in her account to cover them . Why would Bone do so ? Bone could not be reached for comment , but Blair said he thought he knew why . `` I was a very good customer , '' he said , noting he paid Bone $ 800,000 in co mmissions over the years . `` They weren't going to hassle me . If I brought the m somebody , they weren't going to hassle them . '' Besides , he added , Bone wo uld not worry if he agreed with his clients ' bet on which way the price of a gi ven contract would go . Blair , who was outside counsel to Tyson Foods Inc. , Ar kansas ' largest employer , at the time , says he was advising Clinton out of fr iendship , not to seek political gain for his state-regulated client . At the ti me of the trades , Bill Clinton was governor . Hillary Clinton has said she made all the trading decisions herself and has tried to play down Blair 's role . Bu t she acknowledged in April , three weeks after her trades were first disclosed , that Blair actually placed most of the trades . Blair advised Clinton again on July 17 , 1979 . He recalled that she started that trading day by losing $ 26,4 60 on 10 cattle contracts she had held for more than a month , by far her worst loss as a futures player . On his recommendation , he said , she immediately wen t back into the market . She acquired 50 new cattle contracts worth $ 1.4 millio n and when the price moved in her favor , unloaded them around noon for a quick gain of $ 10,550 . This recouped part of her loss . Blair said Clinton and other friends he suggested trades for had lost money that spring on feeder cattle . T hose trades `` caused everyone some grief , '' he said . `` I 'm sure I was pres sing to get everyone back above water '' in recommending the quick and bold day trade . The White House defense of Hillary Clinton 's preferential treatment was that other customers in the same office also were allowed to trade without havi ng enough cash in their accounts . It was akin to a poker game where some of the players did not have to pay the ante up money . While Clinton 's account was wi ldly successful to an outsider , it was small compared to what others were makin g in the cattle futures market in the 1978-79 period . An investigation of the c attle futures market at that time by Rep. Neal Smith , D-Iowa , found that in on e 16-month period 32 traders made more than $ 110 million in profits from large trades those of 50 contracts or more . Clinton traded positions of 50 or more co ntracts only three times . The records the White House released Thursday were pa rt of an investigative file from 1979 , when the exchange charged Bone and Refco with violations of its record keeping and margin requirement rules . Bone was s uspended for three years ; Refco paid a $ 250,000 fine , then the largest in the exchange 's history . Internal memoes from that investigation cover transaction s from the same period in June that Clinton was trading , but not the same trade s . In one instance , the Merc found Bone and a fellow broker were ordering 1,00 0 cattle contracts at a time far over the limit allowed at the time and then all ocating them to other customers . One internal Merc memo said `` there is reason to believe '' that a majority of Bone 's accounts were traded without the clien ts ' permission . Blair said that Bone at times traded his personal account with out permission . `` If your back was turned and the market was dull he was capab le of sprinkling around stuff , including in my account , '' he said . Blair sai d he doubted Bone traded Clinton 's account without her permission . `` He didn' t have the level of comfort screwing around with others as he did with my accoun t . '' Blair said Clinton 's trades paralleled his own . She `` was never a tota l risk taker , '' he said . At times though , Clinton took what seemed to be eno rmously risky trading positions for someone whose salary as a lawyer at the time was $ 24,250 . For example , after trading five or 10 cattle contracts at a tim e in October and November 1978 , she suddenly took a 60-contract order in Decemb er . This was a high-stakes gamble in which she could make or lose up to $ 36,00 0 a day . Blair recalled the position was liquidated quickly `` because she woul dn't have had the money to hold it very long . '' He was right . She had about $ 6,000 in her account at the time-instead of the required $ 72,000 . She liquida ted that position the next day , making a $ 7,250 profit overnight , before payi ng commissions . In a news conference last month , Clinton told reporters she qu it trading at Refco in July 1979 . `` I just couldn't bear the risk anymore . '' MEXICO CITY Mexican officials Thursday denied claims by the relatives of Mario Aburto Martinez , the man accused of killing presidential candidate Luis Donaldo Colosio , that they have been persecuted or prevented from testifying in the ca se . A statement from the attorney general 's office contradicted the claims of six Aburto family members who asked for political asylum in the United States ea rlier this week . The family has since dropped their asylum request and are seek ing permission to stay in the United States temporarily , lawyers said . Meanwhi le , a source close to the murder investigation denied that Ruben Aburto , the s uspect 's father , has any pending arrest warrants that would prevent him from r eturning to Mexico to tell police what he knows . Investigators would even be wi lling go to Los Angeles , where the elder Aburto lives , to take his statement , the source said . The father has said that , before the shooting , his son met with a federal security agent who was arrested at the scene and later released . The accusation hints at a government plot to kill Colosio , the candidate of th e ruling Institutional Revolutionary Party who was almost certain to be elected president . Aburto 's U.S. lawyer said he has not told Mexican authorities about his son 's meeting because he is wanted in Mexico for the 1967 murders of two m en . He said he would not return to Mexico unless he received a guarantee of imm unity from prosecution in that case . That arrest warrant was suspended in 1981 , the source said . ( Optional add end ) Other relatives of Aburto have been que stioned , but no arrest warrants have been issued for them , according to the at torney general 's statement . `` Mexican officials are not pursuing , pressuring or harassing these people , and they may return to the country with no fear for their freedom , '' the statement said . Aburto 's mother , brother sisters and other relatives walked across the U.S.-Mexico border Sunday . The six told U.S. . Immigration agents they feared for their lives because of harassment by Mexica n authorities since Aburto 's arrest immediately after the March 23 assassinatio n .
WASHINGTON Faced with a painful choice between accepting a plea bargain on felo ny charges or fighting them in a costly trial , an anguished Rep. Dan Rostenkows ki , D-Ill. , isolated himself Thursday as he weighed a decision that seemed lik ely to end his congressional career . The well-known and occasionally feared `` Rosty '' rebuffed questioners and stayed away from most colleagues , holing up i n an office reserved for him as chairman of the powerful Ways and Means committe e . Sources familiar with the extended talks between U.S. . Attorney Eric Holder Jr. and Rostenkowski 's lawyer , Robert S. Bennett , said they did not expect t he issue to be resolved until next week . While Holder is pressing for a decisio n by Tuesday the date for the next meeting of a federal grand jury considering e vidence in the two-year investigation the sources said the deadline could slip i f a plea agreement was in sight . Early in the day , an aide vehemently denied b roadcast reports that Rostenkowski had decided to reject all attempts by his law yers to negotiate a plea bargain that would require him to admit guilt , serve t ime in prison and resign from Congress . `` No decision has been made , '' the s pokesman insisted as reporters kept close watch whenever Rostenkowski darted out to vote on the House floor . Rep. William O . Lipinski , D-Ill. , a Chicago col league , was one of the few visitors admitted to Rostenkowski 's inner sanctum . If the gruff-talking Chicago Democrat balks at a plea agreement , however , it was widely expected that he would be indicted on multiple felony charges that wo uld remove him automatically from the chairmanship of Ways and Means , under rul es of the Democratic caucus . Longtime associates said Rostenkowski would resign his seat in the House if he even temporarily lost the influential post . On the other hand , a plea bargain almost certainly would either require Rostenkowski to resign from the House altogether , or create a political backlash that would force him out of office . ( Optional add end ) While it was impossible to forete ll the outcome , it was clear that Rostenkowski would not be rushed . `` Did you ever know him to make an important decision without going to the deadline and f ive minutes beyond that ? '' asked one Rostenkowski aide . At issue in the plea bargain talks is the precise wording of the crime or crimes for which Rostenkows ki would have to acknowledge guilt . Under the law , this language would affect the amount of prison time under federal sentencing guidelines . As Congress depa rted on a Memorial Day break , tourists began snapping pictures of the door to t he Ways and Means office , which bears a sign saying : `` Mr. Rostenkowski. '' A young congressional aide conducting a guided tour told a group of visitors : `` You might be some of the last to see that name on the door . '' WASHINGTON A senior White House official was forced to resign Thursday after he and a colleague took the presidential helicopter , Marine One , from Washington to a private country club near Camp David , Md. , for an afternoon golf game Tu esday . David Watkins , director of the White House Office of Administration and one of the Arkansas friends President Clinton brought with him to Washington , submitted his resignation after his outing with Alphonso Maldon Jr. , director o f the White House Military Office , became public . A picture of the White House officials was published Wednesday in the Frederick ( Md. ) News-Post , making t he quiet trip a public embarrassment . Clinton announced the resignation when as ked about the trip at a White House news conference Thursday afternoon . He said he knew nothing of the trip , which the press office Thursday morning had descr ibed as a routine effort to check out the course for Clinton 's later use . The president said taxpayers would be reimbursed the cost of the helicopter trip , f rom Washington to New Market , Md. , and back . If previous Pentagon estimates o f the cost of military helicopter use hold true , that could be about $ 10,000 . Clinton said he was `` very upset '' when he heard about the trip , and officia ls said Watkins had virtually no defenders in the White House . Last year , he h ad been disciplined for his role in the firing of the seven employes in the trav el office . The White House Thursday night said Maldon , a political appointee , `` has been reprimanded and will be reassigned , '' probably outside the White House . The White House Wednesday night and Thursday morning put out what offici als now realize was a cover story for the trip . It asserted that Watkins and Ma ldon were checking out the course for security and other reasons in advance of a possible presidential trip . A statement drafted by the White House military of fice and released to reporters by the country club and used by White House spoke sman Arthur Jones described the helicopter trip as a `` training mission '' to f amiliarize the crew with the layout of the course , which is an hour away by car . The subsequent golf game by Watkins and Maldon , the statement said , was con ducted `` in order to familiarize themselves with all aspects of the course , es pecially those aspects related to actual time of play and associated impact of s ecurity plans . '' But , as White House officials later acknowledged , neither W atkins nor Maldon have job duties involving checking out sites for presidential security and White House press secretary Dee Dee Myers said the president has no plans to play the course . Clinton generally travels by motorcade on his freque nt golf outings rather than by military helicopter , which costs between $ 5,000 and $ 8,000 an hour to operate . There are at least three of the white-top heli copters in the presidential fleet ; whichever one the president is in is designa ted Marine One . The helicopter has been so sacrosanct in previous administratio ns that highest-ranking officials requesting to use it , such as former chief of staff Donald Regan to visit Ronald Reagan in the hospital , have been turned do wn . The use is controlled by the military office , under rules established by t he White House . Myers said Clinton `` was very concerned when he learned about this '' and had directed Chief of Staff Thomas F. `` Mack '' McLarty to investig ate the matter . Officials said McLarty and others began looking into the issue Wednesday night , and Watkins was , as one official put it , `` made aware by Th ursday morning his resignation would be in order . ' `` The explanation was basi cally that they were checking out the golf course for the president in case he w anted to play on that course , '' a senior administration official said . McLart y and Watkins , the official said , `` quickly came to an agreement that Watkins couldn't effectively continue in his role and Mack agreed to accept his resigna tion . '' The official called it `` a pretty serious error in judgment taking of f in the middle of a work week , taking a military helicopter , playing 18 holes of golf , and taking a military helicopter back to the White House when you 've got a golf course that 's an hour 's drive away . '' The Tuesday trip by Watkin s , who like the president and McLarty is a native of Hope , Ark. , and Maldon w as captured on film by Skip Lawrence , a photographer for the News-Post . They i nvited the Holly Hills club pro and the commanding naval officer at Camp David t o complete the foursome . Maryland Republican Rep. Roscoe Bartlett saw the photo in his local paper and issued an outraged press release , photo attached . Reca lling the uproar when Bush administration Chief of Staff John H. Sununu used gov ernment planes for private business , Bartlett asked , `` Was it really necessar y for your staff to play a course to determine if it was suitable for a presiden tial visit ? '' The president issued an executive order early in his term bannin g use of White House aircraft unless necessary for official duties . `` The taxp ayers should pay no more than absolutely necessary to transport government offic ials , '' the order states . Watkins , 52 , is a veteran of Clinton 's political campaigns and a former Little Rock advertising executive , and he and Hillary R odham Clinton are former business partners . They were in a lucrative cellular-t elephone partnership in Arkansas in 1983 in which Hillary Clinton made $ 48,000 from a $ 2,000 investment . Watkins is now charged with overseeing the White Hou se administrative structure . The White House review of the travel-office firing s concluded Watkins was `` insensitive '' to the implications of revealing that the FBI was investigating the employees . The report questioned his judgment in ordering a review of the office by a woman who had expressed interest in running the office , and said he failed to consider the implications of summarily firin g the employees . WASHINGTON A broad new federal ban on the use of force or threats to stop abort ions ran immediately into constitutional challenges in two courts Thursday just after President Clinton 's signature made it a law . Although the law to protect abortion clinics , their patients and staffs took effect immediately , abortion foes asked judges here and in Alexandria , Va. , to prohibit the government fro m enforcing it . The challengers contended that the law will curb their free spe ech rights , and stop them from expressing their religious opposition to abortio n even by peaceful gestures like praying and verbally urging women entering clin ics not to have abortion . The challengers asked for a hearing in the Alexandria case a week from Friday . That case is expected to move more rapidly than the o ne filed in a federal court here , since the Alexandria court is known for what lawyers and staff call its `` rocket docket . '' Delays are seldom tolerated . E ven if the Justice Department does get temporary clearance to enforce the new cr iminal law , it is expected to be tied up in court battles for several months , and perhaps longer . Both sides expect the constitutional dispute to go eventual ly to the Supreme Court . In a few weeks , the court may give some guidance on t he scope of clinic protesters ' free speech rights , in a pending case from Melb ourne , Fla. . Clinton , surrounded at a White House ceremony at midday Thursday by abortion rights leaders and congressional sponsors of the new law , used the occasion to urge Americans to talk out their differences on abortion and to sto p violence around clinics . `` There is so much .. . we could be doing together to defuse the intense anger and animosity and to listen to one another , '' the president said . Among those in the audience were the two children of the late D r. David Gunn , who was murdered by an abortion foe outside a Pensacola , Fla. , clinic 14 months ago an incident that added pressure on Congress to pass the ne w law . The law , the strongest action taken by Congress to protect women seekin g abortions and clinic staff members , provides criminal penalties up to a maxim um of three years in prison and a $ 250,000 fine . If someone is killed in an an ti-abortion activity , the sentence can be life in prison . The law also allows clinics to sue for unlimited civil damages when they or their patients or staff members have been harmed , threatened or intimidated . Those who drafted the law in Congress , and abortion rights groups , have argued that the measure was wri tten carefully to reach only violent actions . Clinton stressed that point in si gning it , saying that it would serve only `` to eliminate violence and coercion . '' The president argued : `` It is not a strike against the First Amendment . '' ( Optional add end ) That point , however , was disputed directly in the leg al claims made in the two new lawsuits . In the case in U.S. . District Court he re , papers filed by Atlanta lawyer Jay Alan Sekulow said that abortion foes `` are fearful '' that the law could lead to prosecution and heavy punishment for s uch protest activities as staging sit-ins , passing out pictures of aborted fetu ses , preaching , picketing and `` sidewalk counseling '' of patients on the way to get abortions . Suing in that case were Randall A . Terry of Harpersville , N.Y. , who heads Operation Rescue , one of the nation 's most militant anti-abor tion groups , along with five other individuals who said they have been active i n trying to stop women from having abortions . In the case in U.S. . District Co urt in Alexandria , Washington lawyer Marion Edwyn Harrison said in court papers that the new law will criminalize `` activities substantially identical in form and substance to the civil rights ` freedom rides ' and ` sit-ins ' of the 1960 s , and to the nonviolent protest tactics '' of Gandhi , the hero of India 's na tional independence . The only difference , that lawsuit claimed , is that the a ctivities now being turned into crimes are those carried out by `` persons who o ppose abortion . '' That lawsuit was filed by the American Life League , an anti -abortion group based in Stafford , Va. , by a Stafford Catholic priest and thre e other Virginia opponents of abortion . Both lawsuits were aimed directly at At torney General Janet Reno , who lobbied Congress hard for the new measure and wh o has vowed strong enforcement of it by her aides in the Justice Department . Re no said at Wednesday 's bill-signing ceremony that the killing of Gunn last year in Florida `` focused for me and focused the attention of the nation on the pro blem of violent attacks against abortion providers , vandalism at abortion clini cs , and the efforts by some to prevent women from exercising their constitution al right to choose to have an abortion . '' Vice President Al Gore praised the b ill as a `` freedom of access '' measure . Clinton , in his remarks , said that `` with this legislation , we will have a law with teeth to deal with those who take part in unlawful activities , who put themselves above and beyond the law . '' He said there was `` a trend running in this country '' of people taking the law into their own hands to `` wreak violence .. . and verbal extremism . '' Di stributed by the Los Angeles Times-Washington Post News Service . WASHINGTON President Clinton 's decision Thursday to move human rights to the m argins of American dealings with China underlines the administration 's cold cal culation that emphasis on rights had gotten in the way of other priorities . In eliminating his threat to revoke China 's trade privileges over human rights abu Download 9.93 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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